Islam and Evolution: Summary and Review of Dr. Shoaib Malik’s Book


Introduction

I recently finished reading Dr. Shoaib Ahmad Malik’s book titled Islam and Evolution: Al-Ghazālī and the Modern Evolutionary Paradigm. It is an interesting work in which Dr. Malik engages with various issues related to evolutionary biology, philosophy, theology, intelligent design, Christian responses to evolution, and much more. However, the main objective of the book is to highlight the main debates within the Muslim community over evolution and see if they are compatible with Imam Ghazali’s Ashari paradigm.

Dr. Malik uses Imam Ghazali’s writings to derive principles that can help determine whether something is theologically acceptable in the Ashari framework as outlined by Imam Ghazali. He’s clear about the fact that it is a hypothetical exercise on his part and that the principles are derived through his own understanding of Ghazli’s ideas based on his writings. He goes through the literature on evolution and the various discussions surrounding this topic in religious circles and then lays out four primary positions on evolution within the Muslim world: no exceptions (NE), creationism, human exceptionalism (HE), and Adamic exceptionalism (AE). He then measures whether each of these positions abides by Ghazali’s principles or not. If it does, only then, he concludes, it would be theologically acceptable according to the Ghazalian Ashari paradigm.

In this brief overview, I’ll review the book insha’Allah, however, I will mainly focus on Dr. Malik’s discussions related to evolution in the Muslim world and whether each is theologically acceptable or not according to his research. I will not be discussing a host of other topics which he delves deeply into his book, such as, critique of intelligent design, Christian responses to evolution, points related to philosophy of science, history of evolutionary theory, critique of the claim that some Muslims in the classical era hinted at evolution in their writings, metaphysics, etc. The interested reader can refer to his book for further elaboration on those topics.

Defining Evolution

It is important to understand what evolution is and isn’t. There are many misconceptions about evolution among the general public. We need to differentiate between popular conceptions of this theory and how it is actually viewed among scientists. Dr. Malik argues that evolution, as a scientific theory viewed by scientists, consists of three core concepts:

1 – Deep Time

This simply means that a long period (millions to billions of years) has occurred for evolution to take place and is not sudden. It’s a very slow and gradual process.

2 – Common Ancestry

This means that all living entities go back to a common ancestor (i.e. all living creatures are connected somewhere up the chain). Somewhere billions of years ago, all living creatures had a common ancestor. It should be noted here that the theory does not say that human beings came from apes or monkeys, rather, that we all have the same ancestor somewhere up the chain.

3 – Causal Mechanics

This part describes how common ancestors evolved into different species over deep time. Neo-Darwinism, which is the dominant accepted version of the theory at this time, says that random mutations and natural selection are the driving forces of this process. We need to define these two terms to get a better understanding. However, it should be noted that there is some debate in scientific circles over how evolution occurred but not whether it occurred or not. Dr. Malik states, “Despite the success of Neo-Darwinian evolution, there are several scientific debates over the causal mechanics, i.e. the third principle. The critics have aptly referred to this potential revision of Neo-Darwinian evolution or Modern Synthesis as the Extended Evolutionary Synthesis” (p. 56). This is important to understand because there are many on the opposition side that cherry pick critiques from biologists who disagree with the mechanics of new-darwinsim but do not reject evolution as a whole.

Natural Selection

This mechanism states that environmental factors play a part in deciding what types of animals remain and what types die out. As an example, “Giraffes with relatively shorter necks will not survive if they cannot reach the tall trees as their food source. By contrast, the giraffes with longer necks will have a higher chance to survive because they have the necessary trait to endure in that specific context” (pgs. 26-27). Over time, the longer neck giraffes will pass on their genes to their children and we will no longer see giraffes with shorter necks in that environment. This is why the phrase ‘survival of the fittest‘ is often used to describe this process.

Random Mutations

This refers to mutations in the gene which cause the variations in the species. The theory states that when genes mutate over billions of years after being passed down generation after generation, it leads to variation in species. There are various reasons discussed in scientific literature over why mutations occur and include things like exposure to radiation or chemicals, copying errors from one generation to the next, etc. and they can be small or big changes. Dr. Malik states, “Depending on the frequency of mutations, when they occur, how they occur, where (on the genome) they occur, and what they result in can lead to various possible evolutionary pathways” (p. 28).

Dr. Malik also presents evidence used by scientists to prove evolution, the responses to the evidence by those who reject evolution, and the counter arguments to the opposition’s criticisms. Those interested in the evidence may refer to the book for further details.

What Exactly is a Scientific Theory?

It is also important here to clear a misconception about what scientists mean by scientific theory. The meaning of the term as used in the disciplines of science is significantly different from the common vernacular usage of theory. In everyday speech, theory can imply an explanation that represents an unsubstantiated and speculative guess, whereas in science it describes an explanation that has been tested and is widely accepted as valid.

Dr. Malik states, “Science needs facts or data to make claims. Without data, scientists cannot guess what’s going on with the phenomena they are interested in. So once data is acquired, scientists start creating hypotheses. After a hypothesis is further reified through experimentation, scientists begin to develop laws in mathematical form to encapsulate an equation. Once those laws are understood, can be explained, and have been substantially tested, only then does it becomes a scientific theory…A scientific theory is a model that best explains the facts and makes testable predictions. If it continues to align with newly discovered facts and continues to make predictions that come true, it remains a valid theory. In other words, a valid theory is the highest level of substantiation you can get in science” (p. 48).

Creation of Adam and Eve in Islamic Scripture

This would be a good place to bring up relevant verses from the Qur’an and hadiths about origin of mankind. It will help navigate remaining of the discussion insha’Allah.

Qur’an

  • “I created him [i.e. Ādam] with My two hands.” (38:75)
  • “I proportioned him [i.e. Ādam] and blew into him from My spirit.” (15:29)
  • “And [mention, O Muhammad], when your Lord said to the angels, “Indeed, I will make upon the earth a successive authority.” They said, “Will You place upon it one who causes corruption therein and sheds blood, while we declare Your praise and sanctify You?” Allah said, “Indeed, I know that which you do not know.” (2:30)
  • “And [mention] when We said to the angels, “Prostrate before Adam”; so they prostrated, except for Iblees. He refused and was arrogant and became of the disbelievers.” (2:34)
  • “O mankind! Be vigilant of your Lord Who created you from one soul, and created from it its mate (i.e. Hawwa).” (4:1)
  • “O mankind! We created you from a single male and female, and made you into nations and tribes that you may know one another.” (49:13)
  • “Verily, the likeness of ʿĪsā with Allāh is as the likeness of Ādam. He created him [i.e. Ādam] from dust and said to him, Be, and he came to be.” (3:59)
  • “So, We said: ‘O Ādam, this is an enemy to you and to your wife. So let him not expel you from Jannah, lest you should get into trouble. Here you have the privilege that you will not be hungry nor will you be unclad, and you will not be thirsty, nor will you be exposed to the sun.’” (20:117-19)
  • “He said, ‘Go down, some of you enemies of some; and for you on the earth there will be a dwelling place and enjoyment for a time.’” (7:24)

Hadiths

  • “Allah, the Exalted and Glorious, created Adam in His image with His length of sixty cubits, and as He created him He told him to greet that group, and that was a party of angels sitting there, and listen to the response that they give him, for it would form his greeting and that of his offspring. He then went away and said: Peace be upon you! They (the angels) said: May there be peace upon you and the Mercy of Allah, and they made an addition of” Mercy of Allah”. So he who would get into Paradise would get in the form of Adam, his length being sixty cubits, then the people who followed him continued to diminish in size up to this day.” (Muslim)
  • “Angels were created from light, Jinns were created from a smokeless flame of fire, and Adam was created from that which you have been told.” (Muslim)
  • “Moses argued with Adam and said to him, ‘You are the one who got the people out of Paradise by your sin, and thus made them miserable.’” (Bukhari)
  • “Allah created Adam from a handful which he took from the whole of the earth; so the children of Adam are in accordance with the earth: some red, some white, some black, some a mixture, also smooth and rough, bad and good.” (Abu Dawud)
  • “The best day on which the sun has risen is Friday; on it Adam was created, on it he was made to enter Paradise, on it he was expelled from it.” (Muslim)
  • “When Allah created Adam He wiped his back and every person that He created among his offspring until the Day of Resurrection fell out of his back. He placed a ray of light between the eyes of every person. Then He showed them to Adam and he said: ‘O Lord! Who are these people?’ He said: ‘These are your offspring.’ He saw one of them whose ray between his eyes amazed him, so he said: ‘O Lord! Who is this?’ He said: ‘This is a man from the latter nations of your offspring called Dawud.’ He said: ‘Lord! How long did You make his lifespan?’ He said: ‘Sixty years.’ He said: ‘O Lord! Add forty years from my life to his.’ So at the end of Adam’s life, the Angel of death came to him, and he said: ‘Do I not have forty years remaining?’ He said: ‘Did you not give them to your son Dawud?’” He (Prophet (pbuh)) said: “Adam denied, so his offspring denied, and Adam forgot and his offspring forgot, and Adam sinned, so his offspring sinned.” (Tirmidhi)
  • “People should stop boasting about their fathers who have died, while they are but coals of Hell, or they will be more humiliated with Allah than the dung beetle who rolls dung with his nose. Indeed Allah has removed the pride of Jahiliyyah from you, and its boasting about lineage. [Indeed a person is either] a pious believer, or a miserable sinner. And people are all the children of Adam, and Adam was [created] from dust.” (Tirmidhi)
  • “The believers will be assembled on the Day of Resurrection and they will say, ‘Let us look for someone to intercede for us with our Lord so that He may relieve us from this place of ours.’ So they will go to Adam and say, ‘You are Adam, the father of mankind, and Allah created you with His Own Hands and ordered the Angels to prostrate before you, and He taught you the names of all things; so please intercede for us with our Lord so that He may relieve us.’ Adam will say, to them, ‘I am not fit for that,’ and then he will mention to them his mistake which he has committed.’” (Bukhari)
  • “When Allah fashioned Adam in Paradise, He left him as He liked him to leave. Then Iblis roamed round him to see what actually that was and when he found him hollow from within, he recognized that he had been created with a disposition that he would not have control over himself.” (Muslim)

Ghazali’s Principles for Heterodoxy and Valid Figurative Interpretation

Dr. Malik compiles a list of criteria which Ghazali used to determine what is theologically valid and to differentiate between valid and invalid interpretations. The four positions on evolution in the Muslim world are then evaluated based on this criteria.

According to Dr. Malik, Imam Ghazali, “maintains that belief in the three primary principles – God, the Prophet, and the eschaton – have to be held on to alongside any text that is mutawātir, which is not open to figurative interpretation. Otherwise, they may face the charge of unbelief. Apart from this, there are other grey areas that need to be dealt with on a case-by-case basis” (p. 280).

As for Ghazali’s interpretive strategy, then Dr. Malik lists them as five levels. One must begin with the first level, “the most apparent reading (ẓāhir) until there are convincing reasons to go down to lower levels” (p. 281). The levels are as follows (pgs. 281-282):

  1. Ontological (al-wujūd al-dhātī) – In this level, Islamic scripture is understood according to the terms’ apparent meaning, and devoid of any figurative interpretation. For these entities exist in their own right regardless of whether the senses or the imagination apprehends them or not. In other words, these are understood noumenally. One example that al-Ghazālī uses is the mention of seven heavens in the Qurʾān (20:25). It may not be clear what they may be, but they can be accepted at face value since there is nothing inherently contradictory in them.
  2. Sensory/phenomenological (al-wujūd al-hissī) – In this layer, things are conceived as empirical sense impressions. For instance, an image formed of a man in our minds by actually seeing a man in front of us. In contrast to the ontological layer, this second level treats scriptural references phenomenally. As an example of this kind, al-Ghazālī quotes a ḥadīth in which the Prophet claimed that paradise was presented to him in a wall he was looking at (Bukhārī). Al-Ghazālī argues that such a statement cannot be taken at face value, i.e. the first level, because the size of paradise cannot be fitted into a limited wall. Accordingly, what the Prophet may have seen was an image of paradise in the wall.
  3. Conceptual (al-wujūd al-khayālī) – This layer refers to the images of the things that can normally be perceived through the senses but do not have an immediate physical correlation. An example would include imagining an elephant in your mind which you can’t actually see in front of you. Al-Ghazālī gives the example of a ḥadīth in which the Prophet Muhammed sees Prophet Jonah enact something (Muslim). Since the ḥadīth mentions “as if …,” it indicates that the Prophet Muhammed didn’t actually see Prophet Jonah, but rather it was an event that was being played out in his mind. He further argues for this interpretation’s sensibility given the fact that Prophet Jonah didn’t exist in Prophet Muhammed’s time.
  4. Noetic (al-wujūd al-ʿaqlī) – This level signifies mental extractions of the essence of objects which can be understood beyond their physical forms. For example, a pen has a specific physical form, but its essence can be understood as being the recorder or holder of knowledge. As a scriptural example, al-Ghazālī discusses a ḥadīth which goes to the effect of relaying that anyone who exits Hellfire (after being punished and cleansed for their sins) will be given a portion of paradise that is equivalent to ten times the size of the world (Bukhārī 806). This isn’t meant to be a literal understanding in terms of height, breadth, and width, but rather a value judgement. Since paradise is the most sought thing by Muslims, its value essentially supersedes anything. Hence the reference to ten times the size of the world, which implies that whatever portion an individual gets of paradise will be worth a lot.
  5. Analogical (al-wujūd al-shabāhī al-majāzī) – This final level refers to instances wherein a thing itself does not strictly exist ontologically and neither as an image as such. Rather, it has an analogous structure that possesses some quality or attribute that can be related between two things by the mind. In other words, this isn’t an analogy based on the essences of what is being compared like the fourth level, but rather one based on accidents or properties that two things might possess. An example of this type of analogy would include calling a person a lion in connection with his braveness. Since braveness is not essential to a lion nor a person, i.e. you can have cowardice in both, it is a quality or attribute that they could possess but don’t necessarily have to. Al-Ghazālī uses the example of God’s anger (e.g. Qurʾān 20:81) to make this point. Anger, at least how al-Ghazālī defines it, represents a boiling of the blood to seek out vengeance. This is impossible for God since He isn’t equivalent to a human being, and hence cannot have emotions like human beings. It is why the previous levels are inapplicable to such ideas. But we can understand it to imply that God’s anger may have connotations like punishing. Hence there is an analogical crossover from what we can understand of God in human terms without committing to complete isomorphism.

The Four Positions on Evolution in the Muslim World

After laying the framework of Ghazali’s principles for interpretation, Dr. Malik presents the four views on evolution found among Muslims and then analyzes whether each one fits with the Ghazlian framework mentioned above or not. If it does, then it would be considered theologically valid in the Ashari framework, otherwise, it would not.

First Position: No Exceptions (NE)

This is the group that wholeheartedly accepts evolution as a matter of fact for all living organisms including human beings. They interpret all the verses in the Qur’an speaking about the creation of Adam and Hawwa as metaphorical and not literal. They also read in evolution through sophisticated hermaneutic and linguistic twists and turns. Dr. Malik concludes that one of their main reasons for rejecting the account of Adam and Hawwa as a special separate creation is their rejection of miracles in general. They do not believe that Allah intervenes in His creation to disrupt the laws of nature, thus, they also reject the virgin birth of Mary, the splitting of the sea by Moses, and other miracles mentioned in the texts.

You can see Dr. Shabir Ally defending this view here.

Dr. Malik spends a good amount of time analyzing their main arguments and showing inconsistencies and contradictions with the principles he outlined. He concludes at the end that this camp is not theologically valid according to Ghazali’s principles.

It should also be noted that this camp often points to statements from some Muslim scholars of the past which seem to hint at evolution as we understand it today. However, Dr. Malik refutes their arguments in detail with evidence that they were not speaking about evolution when we read their statements in whole with its proper context. Rather, they were speaking about a concept known as The Great Chain of Being, which was popular in their times. Sadly, these quotes are used by some non-Muslims who support evolution as well to suggest that Muslims predated the idea. Evolution is a modern idea that was not known to them concludes Dr. Malik.

Second Position: Creationism

This is the group that rejects evolution as a theory in its totality and believes Allah created all things as they are without the process of evolution. To be clear, they acknowledge micro-evolution but not macro-evolution. Microevolution, as the name suggests, is evolutionary change on a small scale, such as evolution or selection occurring on a single gene or a few genes in a single population over a short period of time. Macroevolution, in contrast, is evolutionary change on a large scale that happens over a longer period of time. Examples include a species diverging into one or more different species, or the formation of brand new groups of organisms. You can read more about the two types here.

You can read Mufti Zameelur Rahman defending this position here.

Dr. Malik concludes that this position is theologically valid according to Ghazali’s principles.

Third Position: Human Exceptionalism (HE)

This group, as the name suggests, believes that evolution may be accepted as it stands, however, with the exception of all human beings. They believe that the verses in the Qur’an and hadiths on the origin of mankind are too explicit and clear to suggest any other alternative. Adam and Hawwa are considered a special miraculous creation independent of the evolutionary process. All mankind today trace their lineage back to these two beings.

You can see Dr. Yasir Qadhi defending this position here and here.

Dr. Malik concludes that this position is theologically valid according to Ghazali’s principles.

Fourth Position: Adamic Exceptionalism (AE)

This is a recently formed new theory proposed by Dr. David Solomon Jalajel. It is similar to Human Exceptionalism (HE) in the following ways:

  • It is willing to accept evolution for all non-human beings
  • It acknowledges that Adam and Hawwa were a special miraculous creation independent of the evolutionary process, thus, they did not have parents
  • It believes all human beings that exist today genetically go back to Adam and Hawwa

The difference is that it leaves open the possibility of there being pre/co-Adamic humans existing on Earth before the arrival of Adam and that these pre/co-Adamic humans could have come as a result of the evolutionary process just like any other non-human being. In addition, they also leave open the possibility that some of Adam’s descendants could have mated and reproduced with these other human-like beings. Thus, in one aspect our lineage goes back to Adam and Hawwa and from another aspect it could go back to these other pre/co-Adamic human beings as well. To be clear, this group neither confirms these two possibilities nor rejects them. Instead, it takes the position of tawaqquf (non-commitment). It’s a type of agnostic position on the matter. They opine that the possibility is open but we don’t really know for certain so they remain silent on the matter. As for the numerous verses and hadiths, they say that they do not rule out the possibility of these two things and that the scripture is silent specifically about them. Some of the defenders of this theory say this view better aligns with modern science especially the recent findings suggesting that modern humans may have interbred with other types of ancient humans in the past based on DNA evidence.

You can read Dr. Jalajel defending this position here.

Dr. Malik concludes that this position is theologically valid according to Ghazali’s principles.

Out of my own curiosity, I reached out to multiple Ashari students of knowledge whether this particular theory with all its nuance would be compatible with the Ashari paradigm or not, however, as of yet they either have not reviewed the theory or say they don’t know. Dr. Malik in the podcasts usually gives references to Dr. Yasir Qadhi and Dr. David Jalajel as the main people who have publicly stated that it is indeed theologically valid. However, I think it would be more suitable if the theory is presented to multiple Ashari theologians for review and feedback.

In my personal discussions with Dr. Malik, he holds all three positions to be theologically valid for Muslims and does not consider himself bound to any one of these three positions.

Who Existed on Earth Before Adam

The Adamic Exceptionalism (AE) theory got me interested to know what Muslims have said, past and present, on the topic of other humans or human-like beings existing on Earth before Adam. To find out, I did a search on Al-Maktaba.org, a popular large database of Islamic books and fatwas in the Arabic language, to see what various scholars have said on this topic. More than 500 results showed. Unfortunately, their site locked me out after sifting through just a few hundred results because I was making too many requests it seems. You can see my findings below. I generally avoided all discussions related to Jinns existing on Earth before Adam because this is widely accepted by most Muslim scholars and is well-known even among the Muslim masses. However, it should be noted that some have pointed out that the idea of Jinns existing  before Adam on Earth is not established through the Qur’an and Sunnah, rather, it is the opinion of some of the salaf and that perhaps they took this from the people of the book.

Findings

Abdul Razzaq Al-San’aani quotes Kalbi that there used to be a creation on Earth before Adam but does not describe them. This occurs with some other authors as well, like Ibn Jawzi, where they mention a ‘creation’ before Adam but do not delve into it.

Sh. Ibn Baaz considers the idea of other primitive humans existing before Adam a myth. However, he seems a bit more charitable in another place where he says that Adam was a khaleefah to whoever passed before him on Earth and that we do not have any conclusive evidence to clarify as to who was on Earth before Adam nor their attributes and actions.

A fatwa dated Safar 1425 AH denies there ever being other humans before Adam arguing that Adam is explicitly stated in one hadith as the ‘father of humans’ (أبو البشر). The hadith is mentioned in Bukhari. It further suggests not to pay any attention to what has been written on the topic recently about there being humans before Adam due to its contradiction to the Qur’an and Sunnah.

A fatwa dated Rabi’ al-Awwal 1423 AH discourages from delving into such questions suggesting that they are not of any benefit. It states, “Knowledge of it does not benefit and ignorance of it does no harm.”

Ibn al-Wardi al-Hafeed mentions in his book that some claim that before Adam there was a creation with flesh and blood on Earth and that this is what the angels were referring to when Allah spoke to them about creating Adam in Surah al-Baqarah 2:30. Further, he says that this creation was sent a prophet named Yusuf whom they killed. He then says that it is said that before Adam, there were a thousand Adams. The author of Ruh al-Bayan reports a strange vision (kashf) reported by Ibn ‘Arabi that there were a thousand Adams  before our Adam and that he had a conversation with one of them in this vision and that he told him he existed 40,000 years before our Adam. The famous scholar Al-Alusi mentions in his Ruh al-Ma’ani a number of reports about there being multiple Adams before our Adam, including the vision of Ibn ‘Arabi, but later concludes that Ahlus Sunnah do not hold this opinion and that Zayn al-ʿArab accuses those who hold such a view of disbelief (kufr) and that reports of this nature are not reliable. Fakhr al-Deen Razi in his tafseer also mentions a report of there being multiple Adams, which he attributes to the books of Shias, but is critical of it and even questions its rationality.

Sh. Muhammad Munajjid says, “There is nothing in the Qur’an or Sunnah to indicate that there were any people living on Earth before Adam. Rather the reports that speak of this are the opinions of Quran commentators among the companions and tabi‘een (successors).” Then he provides two opinions among them, one being that it was the Jinn and the other that there was nobody on Earth. He also quotes Ibn ‘Ashoor saying, “Perhaps these are among the myths of the Persians and Greeks propagated by the storytellers, because the Persians say that before mankind existed on earth, there was a race called at-tamm wa’r-ramm, and the Greeks believed that the earth was populated by creatures called Titans, and Zeus, the leader of their gods according to their beliefs, drove them from the earth because of their evildoing.”

In a fatwa dated Ramadan 1430, a questioner asks about a professor who is arguing based on Qur’an 2:30 that there used to exist people on Earth before Adam but they were savage and were not given ability to reason and whether this professor has become a disbeliever or not by making such a claim. The fatwa responds that the professor is mistaken because no humans existed before Adam, however, the claim is not sufficient for him to be excommunicated from the religion. Rather, he is only guilty of a mistaken interpretation.

Ibn Kathir states that there used to be Hinn and Binn on Earth a thousand years before Adam. They shed blood so Allah sent an army of angels to expel them to isolated islands. Ibn Hajar says these were two tribes that used to exist before Adam. In another place, Ibn Kathir says that Hinn and Binn were created before Adam and Jinns but then Allah made the Jinns prevail over the Hinn and Binn so they killed them and forced them out and then took their place.

Sh. Salih al-Fawzan restricts those before Adam on Earth to the Jinn alone. He also says that Adam being a khalifah on Earth means all four of the following things:

  • He will inherit the Earth
  • He will execute Allah’s laws on Earth
  • He and his children will succeed a nation before him on Earth who were removed from it due to their corruption (i.e. the Jinn)
  • The children of Adam will succeed one another generation after generation

Sh. Sha’rawi defines the word people (الناس) as only in reference to Adam and his descendants.

Sadeeq Hasan Khan in his book says that there is very little information available in the Qur’an and Sunnah about what was in the beginning of creation and that the people came up with stories and legends of creations before Adam. However, he concludes, that these should not be accepted unless they conform to the Qur’an and authentic hadiths. As for what is mentioned in the books of the people of the book, then he says it is best to neither confirm nor deny it but to just do tawaqquf on it.

Muhammad Abdul-Lateef al-Khateeb refers to Adam as the father of mankind and says there used to exist nations on Earth before Adam but does not define them. As for how angels knew about the fact that Adam and his descendants will cause corruption on Earth and shed blood, he says because they saw it written in the Preserved Tablet (Lawh al-Mahfuz). He also suggests the possibility that the angels knew it due to nature of man that it desires the shedding of blood.

The famous Qatari cleric Sh. Othman al-Khamees strongly denies there being any humans on Earth before Adam.

Conclusion and Personal Reflections

Overall, Dr. Malik did a fantastic job writing on the topic without being too technical. The arguments and the concepts are easy to follow despite the details he provides. The four positions he mentions are a good general representation of the views held by various people in the Muslim world. However, I do feel it would have been better for him to reach out to Ashari theologians to get feedback for the Adamic Exceptionalism (AE) position since it is quite recent and no public statements from actual Ashari theologians exist on it.

As for me, then I find myself sympathetic to the Human Exceptionalism (HE) and Creationism positions but have reservations against Adamic Exceptionalism (AE) due to the following reasons:

  • It lacks review, even with all its nuance, and public support from theologians as a valid theory to hold. As I stated earlier, I’ve not been able to have success through reaching out to multiple Ashari students of knowledge and some Shaykhs. One of them told me that they’ve saved themselves by taking the position of tawaqquf on the matter and that was as far as he was willing to comment on it as a theory.
  • The idea of possible interbreeding with co/pre-Adamic human-like species is hard to swallow especially given the fact it seems to contradict the apparent wording of the verses and hadiths. Also, this would be a significant part of the human story, thus, it would necessitate some sort of mention in the religious texts. Dr. Malik has argued that we also do not find mention of dinosaurs, however, I would respond because they do not have any connection to the human story. Thus, there is no need to mention them because there is no benefit in it. Qur’an and hadiths are quite detailed about the human story but we don’t find any mention of breeding with other species, rather, we are constantly referred to as the children of Adam.
  • We need to differentiate between the scientific biological understanding of ‘humans’ and the theological understanding. Theologically, we do not have a timeline of Adam as to when exactly he existed. The different homos found could just be different tribes from the descendants of Adam. There is no need to invest in new radical theories if we can find suitable ones that conform to the apparent text.
  • Scientific knowledge and discoveries are constantly changing. In hundreds of years from now, we could come across new data that radically changes our understanding of human origins and topples evolution on its head. Yes, most biologists are highly skeptical of this and pretty much consider the theory of evolution as a fact but such types of consensuses have been overturned before in the history of science.
  • There is an Islamic legal maxim which states, “Certainty is not removed by doubt (اليقين لا يزول بالشك).” It is used in issues of fiqh and creed. It means that certainty regarding a given matter is not removed if doubt falls upon it. The only way to remove this certainty is by something similar to it, i.e. with surety. So, if a person was certain about something and doubt comes over him, he does not take this doubt into consideration. The only time he should consider or rethink about the certainty of that matter is when there is surety. We can analyze the AE theory based on this principle as follows:
    Certainty in AE: Adam and Hawwa are miraculous creations without parents and we are all their children and descend directly from them.
    Doubt in AE: There could have been other pre/co-Adamic human beings and they could have interbred with some of the descendants of Adam.
    Outcome: Let us stick to the certainty and get rid of the doubt because certainty is not removed by doubt.
  • As for how did the angels know that Adam’s descendants would cause bloodshed on Earth, then we can say this is because Allah Himself told them that Adam’s descendants would cause mischief and bloodshed on Earth, hence, their inquiry into His wisdom behind it. This opinion is attributed to Ibn Mas’ud, Ibn Abbas, Hasan al-Basri, Mujahid, Qatada, Ibn Zayd, Suddi, and Ibn Qutaybah as mentioned by Ibn Jawzi.

Given the above, the best thing, perhaps, to do is stick tightly to the apparent words of the text. I can definitely resonate with some who say that this whole topic is fruitless to delve into deeply from a theological angle because we will never truly know the answer and there is no action required from it on our end. Thus, it may be best to stick to what has been preserved in the Qur’an and the reliable reports. Therefore, as of this moment, I believe in the story of Adam and Hawwa as presented in the Qur’an and hadiths and do not believe that their descendants interbred with any other species. As for whatever is not clear from the texts, like how non-human species came to be, or is not mentioned in the texts, then theologically I have tawaqquf on it. I am reminded about the verse in which Allah praises Mariam:

“She believed in the words of her Lord and His scriptures and was of the devoutly obedient” [Qur’an 66:12].

I would also encourage readers to hear this lecture out by Subboor Ahmad on how to think about evolution.

Finally, I’d like to say that I really did enjoy reading the book not only because I love science as a subject but also because Dr. Malik wrote it in a very engaging manner so the reader does not bore at all even through some of the technical discussions. He also plans on writing a follow-up book on this subject with Dr. Jalajel where they evaluate all the verses and hadiths on the topic of Adam’s creation.

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